Yes, like Polar Bears and fish.
Polar bears, wolf packs, red foxes and humans are only real predators of the adult Arctic fox, along with large birds of prey such as snowy owls, that primarily prey on the smaller and more vulnerable Arctic fox cubs.
The Arctic Hare changes color for summer and winter seasons as an adaptation for blending in with their environment. This keeps them safer from predators.
pretty anything up there that can catch em,.....fox, eagles, martins, wolves, any preditor that is big.
Arctic foxes generally live in white, snowy environments. The white fur of the arctic fox easily blends in with such a background, effectively rendering them invisible to predators and prey.
They are both predators and prey.
They are both predators and prey.
The number of predators and prey in a community is often balanced in a way that prevents either group from becoming too dominant. If there are more predators, they may eventually reduce the prey population, leading to a decrease in the predator population. Similarly, if there are more prey, their numbers may increase until they reach a point where food becomes scarce and their population declines.
Yes. They're a prey animal, which makes them more than inclined to have predators.
Prey bugs and predators leapords
An Arctic fox is a predator as well as a prey item.
Prey animals are eaten by predators. (Preydators)
There is no short term effect, the cycle will just go in these four stages. more predators= fewer preys too little food= predators starve few predators= more prey survive food plentiful= more predators survive